? Defrosting Your Appliance
? When? For the most efficient operation and minimum energy consumption, defrost the
appliance compartment when the frost on the appliance walls is excessive or ¼ inch thick.
There is no need to defrost the refrigerator, because ice depositing on the inner back wall is
defrosted automatically. Ice is depositing on the inner back wall during the compressor
operation; later on, when the compressor i s not operating ice is defrosting and water drops
collect and drain through the outlet in the inner back wall into the drain pan situated above the
compressor, from where it evaporates.
Do not use boiling water because it may damage the plastic parts. In addition, never
use a sharp or metallic instrument to remove frost as it may damage the cooling coils
and will void the warranty. We recommend using the plastic scraper.
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A few hours before defrosting set the thermostat to position 5, so foods are well frozen.
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Reset the thermostat to 0 position and disconnect the power supply.
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Remove the frozen food from the appliance and place it in a cooler to protect the food.
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Leave the door open for a while so that you can easy scrape off the frost.
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Use a plastic scraper but be careful not to damage the inner surfaces of the freezer.
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Wipe up the scraped frost and ice before it is completely defrosted.
? Using Your Ice Cube Trays
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Recommended thermostat setting for ice making is position 5.
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Fill the ice cube tray (two thirds of it) with cold water or with any liquid
suitable for freezing and place the tray on the bottom of the freezer to
freeze properly.
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Dry the tray, otherwise it may stick to the bottom of the freezer.
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The best method to get ice cubes out of the tray is to hold the tray
under cold tap water for a second.
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To eject the ice cubes from the trays, place over the ice bucket and twist slightly
? Freezing Fresh Foods
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Proper use of the appliance, adequately packed food, correct temperature and taking into
account hygienic precautions will substantially influence the quality of freezing the food or
storing of the frozen foods.
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Carefully select food you intend to freeze; it should be of adequate quality and suitable for
freezing.
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Use correct packaging and wrap it right.
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The packaging should be airtight and shouldn't leak since this could cause substantial vitamin
loss and dehydration of foods.
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Foils and bags should be soft enough to tightly wrap around the foods.
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When preparing foods to be frozen, consider sanitary precautions.
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Mark packages with following data: kind and amount of foods and the date of loading.
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It is most Important that the food is frozen as quickly as possible.
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If the loading amount is too large, the quality of freezing is reduced which affects the quality of
frozen foods.
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The next time you want to freeze fresh foods, repeat the freezing procedure and be careful
that packages with fresh foods do not touch frozen pac kages.
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For freezing smaller amount of foods (up to 2 lbs.) there is no need to change the thermostat
setting.
CAUTION
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